(Newser)
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Residents in a southern Japanese city are busy washing ash off the streets today after a nearby volcano spewed a record-high smoke plume into the sky. Ash wafted as high as three miles above the Sakurajima volcano in the southern city of Kagoshima yesterday afternoon, forming its highest plume since the Japan Meteorological Agency started keeping records in 2006. Lava flowed about a half-mile from the fissure, and several huge volcanic rocks rolled down the mountainside.

Though the eruption was more massive than usual, residents of the city of about 600,000 are quite used to hearing from their 3,664-foot neighbor. Kagoshima officials said in a statement that this was Sakurajima's 500th eruption this year alone. Residents wore masks and raincoats and used umbrellas to shield themselves from the falling ash. Drivers turned on their headlights in the dull evening gloom, and railway service in the city was halted temporarily so ash could be removed from the tracks. "The smoke was a bit dramatic, but we are kind of used to it," an official said. (Read more Japan stories.)

In this early Sunday evening, Aug. 18, 2013 photo, buildings stand shrouded in ash after the Sakurajima volcano erupted in the afteroon in Kagoshima, on the southern Japanese main island of Kyushu. ((AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT)

Volcanic smoke billows from Mount Sakurajima in Kagoshima, on the southern Japanese main island of Kyushu Sunday, Aug. 18, 2013. ((AP Photo/Kagoshima Local Meteorological Observatory))

In this Sunday, Aug. 18, 2013 photo, drivers use headlights early evening as the streets are covered by ash after the Sakurajima volcano erupted earlier in the day in Kagoshima. ((AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT)